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PROCEEDINGS COTTESWOLD CLUB 
1920 
preservation, and shows little trace of the characteristic internal 
structure. 
It is worth noting that Pentamerus oblongus does not occur 
in the accompanying list, but one specimen is recorded in the 
Survey Memoirs as having been found on Huntley Hill, from 
which division of the Llandovery beds, however, is not 
mentioned. 
Trilobites seem exceedingly scarce. Eucrinurus punctatus, 
so common elsewhere in beds of this age, has only been 
recorded once. 1 Of the 29 species here recorded 21 are formed 
at Tortworth. 
Amongst the Wenlock Shale fossils is Chonetes ceratoides, a 
fossil first described as occurring in the Usk area, 2 where it is 
found in beds of both Ludlow and Wenlock age. 
The Wenlock Limestone is very fossiliferous and very rich 
in corals. A new species of Lidias, described below, was found 
in the quarry on Hobbs. 
Of the 77 species recorded here 39 have been found at 
Tortworth and 23 in the L’sk area from the Wenlock Limestone. 
The fossils from the Ludlow beds call for little remark. 
Calymene intermedia, recorded from Usk for the first time in 
the British Islands, occurs at May Hill, and a new variety of 
Calymene papillata is described below. 
The Stropheodonta from the Ludlow beds is not 5. filosa but 
apparently an undescribed species, according to Dr. Reed. A 
better specimen is, however, required before it can be defined. 
Although special care has been taken to search the Silurian 
beds for graptolites, no trace of them has so far been discovered. 
But there is a reference in the Survey Memoirs to one specimen 
of Graptolithus ludense from the May Hill area, no exact 
locality being given. 
My sincere thanks are due to Dr. F. R. C. Reed for his 
kindness in looking over several fossils and naming them, to 
Professor S. H. Reynolds for much useful criticism, and to 
Dr. Smith Woodward for having inspected fish remains from 
the Ludlow bone bed. 
1 There is one specimen in the Sedgwick Museum at Cambridge. 
2 C. I. Gardiner, ** The Silurian Inlier of Usk,” Proceedings of the Cotteswold Naturalists' Field 
Club (1916), p. 129. 
